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find Keyword "Descriptive study" 1 results
  • Surgical Management for Chinese Children Urethral Injury: A Systematic Review

    Objective To review the surgical management for Chinese children urethral injury (CUI). Methods According to the evidence-based medicine principal and the approach of systematic review, we searched Chinese Biomedicine Database and PubMed, all literature retrievals were updated until September 8th, 2008. At least two reviewers independently screened the studies for eligibility, evaluated the quality with the Joanna Briggs Institute critical appraisal checklist for descriptive/cases series studies and extracted the data with excel 2003 from the eligible literatures, with confirmation of cross-check. Different views were consulted by the third party. The characteristics of literature, research quality, study content, cases characteristics, diagnosis and treatment, outcome appraisal and follow-up were analyzed. Results A total of 22 studies involving 1019 patients were included, most patients were male children. All 22 studies were descriptive researches and the study quality was low. The etiologies were mainly pelvic fracture and straddle injury as results of misadventure. The diagnosis was based on the relatively objective diagnostic tests such as urethrography, operations research and the exploration of urethral bougie etc in 16 studies. The most categories of CUI were obsolete urethral injuries such as stricture and atresia, the injury sites mainly lied in posterior urethra. The management of CUI were divided into the primary treatment included the first-stage operation and delayed-stage repair, and the second-stage management. Moreover, the individual operation was according to the injury sites and patterns. A total of 14 studies reported the outcomes of operation at various success rates (52%-100%). Except 4 studies, the others reported incomplete follow-up time, from 3 months to 16 years, but few adopted objective methods such as urethrography and urodynamic test. The main complications were urethral stricture, urinary fistula and sexual dysfunction etc. Conclusion The quality of CUI studies was low for lack of prospective randomized controlled trials. The major patients were male children with posterior urethra injuries. Because of the heterogeneitiy of the individual case, different surgeon’s managements and the variety of treatment options, we cannot make identical conclusion. We need more researches with high methodological quality. Moreover, we recommend that, following the clinical practice guideline of CUI made by Chinese Urological Association for the Chinese urologist, and then performing individual surgical management.

    Release date:2016-09-07 11:24 Export PDF Favorites Scan
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